People wave banners depicting Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May, during a protest march in support of the National Health Service. Photo / AP
From his wind-scoured bungalow, Andreas Herfurt overlooks the village cemetery, an end place in his line of work.
For almost 20 years, the German has served as the town doctor at Bettyhill in the woolly wilds on the north coast of Scotland.
"Those are not just my former patients," Herfurt said of the graves surrounding the old church. "They are my neighbours and my friends. I have learned the hard way the whole truth about cradle-to-grave medical care."
Herfurt is the National Health Service's family physician for 850 souls in a 1035 sq km rural practice. This is a place where the cosy village pub - the Farr Bay Inn, known with a wink as the FBI - has a restroom the size of a walk-in closet, the only restaurant option in winter is a fish-and-chips shop, and sheep outnumber humans by thousands to one.
Herfurt, 53, who never became a British citizen, says he has loved his life in the NHS, the United Kingdom's much-admired, oft-derided, state-run universal healthcare system. He has made decent money, by European standards. And he digs living in the middle of nowhere, with his Scottish wife and their big, slobbery dog.
Like Herfurt, many of his European colleagues in the NHS say they were stunned by Brexit, the vote by Britain in a June 2016 referendum to leave the European Union. The exit, which was not backed by most voters in Scotland or Northern Ireland, is scheduled for March 2019.
In a survey at the end of last year, the British Medical Association discovered that almost half of the European doctors working in Britain were considering leaving following the Brexit vote, and that nearly one in five were taking concrete steps - selling homes, looking for jobs.
If Brexit was driven by strong emotions, so is the reaction to it by some European doctors and nurses in the NHS.
In interviews with the Washington Post, several of those who are thinking about leaving didn't point to overt acts of xenophobia. They acknowledged that nobody is kicking them out of the country.
But they are taking Brexit personally, expressing indignation at the prospect of having to be vetted in post-Brexit Britain. Many said they would refuse to stand in line for a work visa or submit to a criminal-background check - not after years of overseeing life-or-death decisions and emptying bedpans for British patients.
They noted that when they came to work here, they were Europeans coming to a member state of the European Union. They didn't see themselves as "immigrants." They were Europeans exercising their right to free movement in Europe. They were wooed by the NHS.
Many never sought British citizenship because they didn't have to. They assumed they could spend their careers, perhaps their whole lives, here.
Daniela Schulze-Henning, 43, an NHS psychologist, recently put her house on the market and plans to move back to Germany with her husband, a GP, and their two children.
"We're not the only ones. We have GP friends going back," she said. "It's everywhere."
She said that 70 per cent of the people in her London suburb voted for Brexit, including a neighbour who had a big "LEAVE" poster displayed in her window.
If the European medical workers do exit in large numbers, they will be missed.
This month, Parliament published new statistics on NHS staff from overseas, revealing that in Britain, about 139,000 - or 12.5 per cent of NHS staff - are from Europe and elsewhere. Europeans dominate in the most skilled jobs. About 10 per cent of doctors and 7 per cent of nurses are European nationals.
The study did not publish figures for Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland because of differences in reporting, but health experts say the numbers are similar to England's.
Brexit was propelled by disparate goals: Voters wanted to slash immigration, not only from countries such as Bangladesh or Ukraine but from the EU, as well. They were also promised a windfall in NHS funding after payments to the bloc ended - US$500 million a week, the Leave campaigners vowed, a claim that was later debunked and disavowed.
The NHS faces crisis-level staff shortages and relies heavily on Europeans to do the jobs that British nationals either can't or won't do.
European doctors interviewed say their fealty to the United Kingdom swings with the headlines.
The first EU country I visited after Brexit was Italy. I was all braced for mockery, pity, perhaps even contempt - but I was surprised how many Italians actually expressed a slight measure of envy. https://t.co/hPP8YEcQWw
One day, they read that Prime Minister Theresa May has promised Britain will always welcome "the best and brightest" from the continent. The next day, they see hard-line Brexiteers in her cabinet insisting that annual net immigration must be slashed from current levels of hundreds of thousands of newcomers to a post-Brexit goal in the tens of thousands.
Many wonder how their children will fare. They are unsettled, too, by the tabloid rhetoric branding Brexit opponents "enemies of the people."
As a boy growing up in Majorca, Spain, Carlos Hoyos remembers being fascinated by British inventors. England embraced openness, he believed. When he visited London as a teenager, something clicked: "I thought, 'This is where I want to live.' "
It has now been 27 years since Hoyos moved to the UK. He lives with his British wife and their two teenage daughters in Southampton, on England's south coast, where he works for the NHS as a child and adolescent psychiatrist.
"It's emotional that these people I have admired all this time actually don't want me here," Hoyos said. "It's a sense of rejection."
Harry Quilter-Pinner, a research fellow at the Institute for Public Policy Research in London, said, "The influx of workers from the EU are vital to keeping the show on the road."
He added: "If the Government said, 'Okay, let's train up new doctors,' you wouldn't get any payoff for 10 years. The only way to fill that gap is through immigration."
The problem, said Siva Anandaciva, chief analyst for the King's Fund, an independent healthcare think-tank, is "the worrying trends emerging that show these staff no longer want to work in the UK."
He pointed to sharp declines in the numbers of European nurses and midwives coming to Britain at a time when the country needs to hire tens of thousands of nurses.
Joan Pons Laplana, 42, is from Barcelona and works as an NHS nurse in Chesterfield. He has lived in Britain for 17 years and has three children, all born in England.
"Despite my family, despite paying taxes, despite working hundreds of hours of unpaid overtime, like everyone else in the NHS, I feel like I don't count for anything, that I am invisible," he said.
"There's the younger generation, who have been here for less than five years. All of them are packing up. A lot of colleagues are going," Laplana said. "There's the second group, like me, it's not that easy, because of my family, my kids, my career of nearly 20 years, my mortgage, my friends - where do I go? I don't have anything in Spain. I have my mum and dad, but Spain is not my home."
The NHS has buckled under the strain during the current flu season, with hospital corridors crowded with gurneys and 12-hour waits in emergency rooms. Heart and cancer surgeries have been postponed.
Herfurt has continued his usual house calls, his visits to elder-care residences. He said, "I am a dinosaur," and added with a flash of frustration, "Good luck finding my replacement" - someone who will work long hours in a remote rural practice.
If he stays, it will be because of his patients.
For 19 years, he has spent his days here giving howling 6-week-old babies their first checkups; seeing snotty-nosed kids through childhood vaccines; helping mums with pregnancies - then shepherding the older folks through the middle and final years of heart disease, diabetes, cancer and dementia to death.
"It has been a privilege to practice this kind of medicine," Herfurt said.